Last week, the US Supreme Court issued its long-anticipated ruling in the Masterpiece Cakeshop case, overturning a Colorado state Civil Rights Commission decision which said the owner of the bakery “unlawfully discriminated” against a same-sex couple by refusing to make them a wedding cake. That case was overturned based on what the justices perceived as Colorado government’s “hostility” to religion. So, what are the implications of the decision, what does it mean when legal experts called the ruling limited or narrow, and what’s coming up in the federal judicial landscape that could be relevant? With us to explain all of these questions is the Robert F. Wagner Professor of Labor and Employment Law at New York Law School, Arthur Leonard.